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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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I've got three tools and I've been using them to test my lamp
pendants. I've got the faithful neon screwdriver, a digital multimeter (set to 500V) and a 'digital circuit tester' from Blackspur which I bought for a quid. This last tool has two functions: (a) it shows if the terminal in contact is live; (b) what the voltage is. It has a reading of 12-36-55-110-220v and illuminates the value below what the actual voltage is. It works by the user holding the non-contact end to complete the circuit a la the neon screwdriver. When the pendant is switched off, the phase terminal shows (in order of the tool above): 1. LED lit quite brightly 2. (null reading) 3. between 12V and 36v (36v is slightly illuminated). When the pendant is switched on, the phase terminal shows (in order of the tool above): 1. LED lit very brightly 2. 246-250v (depending upon pendant) 3. 220V. This situation is present on each pendant I have tested. None of the pendants appear to faulty in day-to-day use. I'm a little intrigued that the two cheaper tools are showing the the phase terminal is live when there should be no current. My real concern is that these tools infer there is current flowing to the terminal with the pendant is swicthed off and that there's a possibility of getting electrocuted when changing a bulb. Are all my pendants wired incorrectly? Thanks |